Uvalde is a community where many residents spend time outdoors—on properties, in yards, on farms and ranches, and around land that’s maintained for safety and growth control. In that setting, glyphosate exposure concerns often come from real-world routines such as:
- Yard and property spraying for weeds and brush control
- Mowing or clearing vegetation after spraying, when residue may remain on plants and surfaces
- Worksite exposure for groundskeeping, landscaping, or facility maintenance
- Secondhand exposure, such as residues carried on work clothing, boots, or equipment
- Nearby application on adjacent land, where wind or overspray may affect nearby areas
When people reach out for Round Up legal help, they usually already have one key piece: a diagnosis. The next step is building the timeline—when the spraying happened, what products were used, where exposure likely occurred, and how the illness developed.


